Sermon Tone Analysis
Overall tone of the sermon
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Welcome
Welcome to Easter Sunday!
Have you ever had a friend or family member who was a chronic liar?
I went to college with a guy who, as far as we could tell, couldn’t help himself.
I say that because when he lied, it was about dumb stuff.
Like, he told a bunch of us that he owned a corvette.
Which is awesome - except he didn’t drive a corvette.
He said it was because his parents wouldn’t let him bring it to school.
Which actually made sense.
But then he told some of us it was a blue corvette.
Then he told other guys it was a yellow corvette.
Uh.
Wait.
Which one is it?
We asked him.
“Oh, I have two corvettes,” he said.
“A blue one and a yellow one.”
Riiiiiight.
This is where the story became just too out there for us to believe it.
I share that story because we’re gathered today to celebrate Jesus’ resurrection.
And it’s this story where I often lose people when we’re talking about faith.
Afterall, people in general love Jesus.
They see his kindness towards those on the margins.
How he spoke truth to power, challenged those who abused their power.
His pithy wisdom and provocative parables resonate with us even today.
It’s no wonder he’s listed among the greatest persons who ever lived - up there with Buddha, Mohammad, Joan of Arc, Gandhi, Dr. King.
But then we get to Easter.
To the conviction we have that, after Jesus was crucified, he was buried.
Then, on Sunday, his body was raised from the dead.
I can’t tell you the number of times someone has said, “So you really believe that?” as though I’ve just told them that thunder is angels bowling.
And yet… we do believe that.
More than just that we believe Jesus was raised from the dead, we believe that his resurrection is what validates all the other stuff we love about Jesus.
The resurrection is what proves that Jesus’ way in the world makes sense.
It’s why we can find the courage to love our enemies, to resist oppression, to live in solidarity with the marginalized.
To speak truth to power.
To confront the sin in our own hearts.
Jesus’ resurrection makes all this possible.
Without Jesus’ resurrection, there’s nothing to Christianity.
Paul, who planted many of the first churches, said as much in one of his letters.
In writing to the churches in the Greek city of Corinth, Paul said:
“If Christ has not been raised, we are more to be pitied than anyone in the world.”
Does it surprise you that in Corinth, there were people who denied resurrection?
After all, don’t we usually think of ourselves as the scientific, rational people who have moved beyond superstition?
It was those primitive people back then who believed in gods and omens and miracles.
But Corinth is a Greek city - the culture of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
They were skeptical people, especially to outlandish claims like Paul’s that there’s only one God, that this God had a son, and that not only was this son crucified, but three days later, God raised him from the dead.
For Paul, this wasn’t just a cool story.
And it wasn’t an optional idea.
Paul didn’t think we could take all the good stuff Jesus said about loving our enemies and being kind to the outsider, but leave the resurrection.
Why?
Well, since it’s Easter Sunday, today, we’re going to hear the story of Jesus’ resurrection again, and we’re going to pay particular attention to the people in the story who weren’t excited about it.
Those who were threatened by the idea that God might raise God’s son from the dead.
Who would lie about Easter?
Well, the people who stand to lose when God brings justice.
Those who profit off the misery of others.
Those who thrive in the midst of ethnic division.
Those who don’t have the courage to look within and be changed.
Why do we celebrate today?
Because God did, in fact, raise Jesus from the dead.
And that means the whole world is changing, bending toward justice.
So let’s celebrate!
Message
Today is the most important day in the Christian calendar.
I know, it’s easy to think it’s Christmas.
But really and truly, it’s Easter Sunday.
The day Jesus was raised from the dead.
I mentioned earlier that plenty of people didn’t believe Jesus was raised.
But before we get to them, I want to review the Easter story.
Turn with us to Matthew 28.
A lot of folks don’t realize that each Gospel has its own version of the Easter story.
In Mark, the women who go to the tomb don’t even meet Jesus.
John has Mary encounter Jesus in the garden, then a footrace between Peter and the Beloved disciple.
Matthew’s story focuses less on the disciples than on the Jewish and Roman authorities - something that shouldn’t be too surprising since his Christmas story is the one that featured King Herod.
Throughout Matthew’s gospel, he has focused on the response of the powerful to this God-with-us.
So let’s read, paying attention to the emotions of those in the story.
A lot of fear in the first part of the story - and understandably so.
The Roman soldiers are so afraid they fall down as though dead - ironic, since they’re guarding what they think was a dead man.
The women, on the other hand, see their fear transformed into joy.
An angel appears to them and tells them what’s happening: Jesus has been raised!
Then, on their way to find the rest of the disciples, they encounter Jesus himself.
Jesus appoints them as the first Christian apostles, sending them to announce the good news of the resurrection.
This is the story we have in the four Gospels, the Easter story.
Before we dive into what sets Matthew’s story apart, let’s celebrate again how Jesus’ resurrection transforms our fear into joy by making the impossible a reality!
BREAK
Matthew tells us the story of guards who were so afraid they passed out.
But they weren’t the only ones afraid; the women were afraid too.
The other gospels tell us they had come to finish the burial process.
This is an important note: The women were not coming expecting to find the tomb empty.
These are the women who made it to the cross, even when the rest of the disciples had abandoned Jesus.
And even they did not expect Jesus to rise from the dead.
This despite the fact that, on at least three separate occasions, Jesus told his followers he was going to be raised.
And it wasn’t a very well-kept secret.
How do we know?
Let’s back up and read what happened on Saturday, the day between Jesus’ execution and his resurrection.
The religious leaders who had been opposing Jesus since he was starting out had heard about his prediction that he’d rise form the dead.
Those guards?
They were there to keep anyone from breaking into the tomb.
Roman soldiers, the most powerful, well-trained, well-equipped army in the world, facing away from the tomb, looking for threats from without.
Do you wonder at their conversations?
Were they grateful for a puff detail - knowing at most they’d have to fight off a handful of untrained, would-be revolutionaries?
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